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Content Is Copyright Protected and Provided for Personal Use Only - Not for Reproduction Or Retransmission Content is copyright protected and provided for personal use only - not for reproduction or retransmission. www.thepowermagazine.com 26 MAY/JUNE 2012 • POWER MAGAZINE For reprints please contact the Publisher. BIG AL DAVIS BY JEFF IRION PHOTOS COURTESY OF MHP Al Davis’ nickname is Big Al, and deservedly so — he’s 6-foot-3 and 300 lbs., with mas- sive arms and no gut to speak of. A former national-level bodybuilder, Davis is now one of the top raw bench pressers of all time. Here’s what he had to say about gettin’ yoked and benchin’ a load! POWER: When did you start competing in bodybuilding? What are some of your top finishes? Do you still compete in bodybuilding, or are you a full time powerlifter now? BIG AL: I believe my first competition was in 2002. It was what is now the Europa, sponsored by Ed and Betty Pariso. I won first place and then went on to do about a show per year up to my last show, the 2009 Jr. Nationals, where I got a top-five finish. Now that I’m powerlifting, I’ve put bodybuilding on hold because it was very hard bouncing back and forth. But I would like to go back and try to get my pro card one day. That’s one chapter in my life that I feel is not complete yet. POWER: How did you get started in powerlifting? When was your first powerlifting meet and what did you bench? BIG AL: Well, it really all started one year as I was literally walking off the stage at the Ronnie Coleman Classic. I bumped into Ken Anderson and he was trying to convince me to start competing. I fought him on it even when he told me about the raw meets. He then told me about a meet that would be held at the Europa in Dallas and that it was paying $1,500. That quickly changed my mind! I thought, “Hey, I can come do my regular Saturday morning workout and win money!” That was the Clash of the Titans in 2007. I benched 605, then did 18 reps with 405 in the bench-for-reps contest. POWER: What is your ultimate bench press goal? Editor’s note: For reference, Scot Mendelson holds both the all-time raw bench record (715) and the all-time 308 raw bench record (701). Aside from Mendelson, the only other person to raw bench 700-plus in a meet is James Henderson at SHW.) BIG AL: My goal, naturally, is to break the world record of 715. I am a competitor. I love to compete and I like striving to be the best at what I do. POWER: You once described yourself as a former skinny guy, and said you played soccer and were on the swim team. How did you transform into a 300-lb. behemoth? What tips do you have for our readers who are looking to make similar transformations? BIG AL: You know, that is a fight that I still struggle with. I am not a big eater like some of these guys, so I can’t pile the food up and just gorge. So I have to eat often, and if I can’t eat it I have to drink it. When I was in college I would do stupid things like go drink a six-pack, come home and get on the bench. Today my struggle is that I work in a cold data center all day where no food or drinks are allowed. I have to force myself to stop and go eat, and if worse comes to worse go grab some aminos or a shake or something, just to get some food in me. POWER: To make those of us who raw bench a little (or a lot) less than 670 feel better about our- selves, tell us about the first time you ever bench pressed. Also, how fast did your bench progress? Content is copyright protected and provided for personal use only - not for reproduction or retransmission. www.thepowermagazine.com For reprints please contact the Publisher. POWER MAGAZINE • MAY/JUNE 2012 27 BIG AL: I didn’t start until ninth grade. Until then my mom didn’t bar). At some point in that year you switched to a false grip, want me to lift because she said it could stunt my growth. When I which is what you used for your 670 bench. Why did you got to high school I was behind a lot of the guys in my class because make the switch? What do you feel are the advantages of they had already been lifting for a couple of years, so I was totally using a false grip? embarrassed because I was struggling with 90 lbs. But I went to a BIG AL: I’ve been using false grip for a while, but until I got high school that was a football powerhouse: Dallas Carter. I’m sure really comfortable with it I wouldn’t do it with the really heavy you’ve heard of them, the good and the bad. Anyway, when I started weight. I prefer it because it protects my wrists. When using a full training I was able to add about 90 lbs. to my bench each year until grip, you have a better chance of the bar rolling back in your I got into the 600s. hands, bending your wrists back and POWER: When it comes to bench injuring them. With the false grip, the press technique, you do everything bar sits right against the palms of your “wrong:” you don’t tuck your elbows, hands, perpendicular to your forearm, you don’t arch and you don’t use leg which takes the wrists totally out of drive. And to top it all off, you have the game. long arms. However, you’re one of POWER: What about placing less the top raw benchers in the world. It stress on the pecs and shoulders? Is doesn’t make sense! How are you so that a factor in why you choose to good at benching? use a false grip? BIG AL: Hell, I don’t know! When I BIG AL: No, not at all. I’ve been started benching it was all about the lucky to not have any issues with my aesthetics and bodybuilding, so at the shoulders or pecs. Maybe it’s because time things like arch, tuck and leg drive of my bodybuilding background, but I didn’t matter. I’d even do things like tend to specifically train those muscles bench with my feet up in the air. Until I so that they are ready for the heavy got with my coach, Josh Bryant, I’d weight. For example, I do really heavy never had a coach except my buddies front raises and heavy flys. in the gym. The only thing I knew was POWER: And now the question that I needed to get the bar from point everyone wants to know: How do A to point B, so I needed to build the you train the bench press? strength to do that. Who knew I would BIG AL: I have always trained be a powerlifter in the future? Now that bench twice a week, one heavy day I’m with Josh, I’m starting to learn a lot and one not-so-heavy day with more of the technical aspects of benching, volume. You know, so many in the but bad habits are hard to break. He bodybuilding world believe in training has me work on trying to get a little a muscle group once a week, but I more arch in the back and bringing in the leg drive, but he does not would lose strength doing that. I’m a true believer that I need to want to change my elbows. As for my bench press success, I guess keep an adequate amount of blood in those muscles at all times. it’s totally based on the desire to win. Before Josh I was self-taught, and my workouts were all about POWER: In August 2007 you benched 605 lbs. in competition. volume. Heavy volume, but still volume. What Josh introduced me to Four years later, you hit a 670 bench in competition. Everyone is what I call classic powerlifting training: bands, boards, chains and thinks that benching raw (especially with a wide grip like yours) a host of other specialized training methods, including speed training. will beat you up, wreck your shoulders and eat away at your POWER: Do you train the squat or deadlift? soul. Yet you have managed to stay injury free while making BIG AL: I still train my lower body like a bodybuilder. I do a lot steady progress. What’s your secret? of partial deadlifts, and for my legs I normally do my full workout BIG AL: I listen to my body. I know that sounds like a BS answer, and put squats at the end so that I don’t have to go as heavy. My but it’s true. Your body tells you everything you need to know. For knees are not very good. example, there have been days when I didn’t feel my best and I did POWER: Give us your top three tips for making consistent nothing but cardio or sometimes turned around and walked right progress in the bench press. back out the door. What I’m saying is, I put in what work I can and BIG AL: 1.
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